Sex differences in global metrics of brain size across the lifespan
Samuel N. Vucic, Brianna Georges, Sophia Frangou, Neda Sadeghi, Tonya White

TL;DR
This study finds that brain size differences between males and females change over a lifetime, with males having larger brain metrics in early life and these differences increasing during adolescence.
Contribution
The study reveals that sex differences in brain size metrics are not stable but change across the lifespan, particularly increasing during adolescence.
Findings
Males have consistently larger head circumference than females from fetal life through early childhood.
Effect sizes of brain size differences increase during adolescence, especially for cortical surface area and volume.
Females show a temporary advantage in cortical thickness during childhood, which diminishes by mid-adolescence.
Abstract
While global brain volume differences between males and females have been shown to manifest during prenatal life, it is unclear whether global differences remain stable or show variability over the lifespan. Therefore, our goal was to use the existing literature coupled with large-population-based studies to assess age-related differences in effect size estimates of brain size between males and females over the life-span. We quantified effect size measures (Cohen’s d) of sex differences in terms of head circumference using data drawn from the literature of prenatal (14 weeks to birth) ultrasounds of n = 36,487 uncomplicated healthy births and direct postnatal (0–7 years) head circumference measurements from 85,598 children. The effect size of sex differences of cortical surface area, cortical thickness, and cortical volume were also computed from structural magnetic resonance imaging…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
